High Speed Rail Interactive Map

High Speed Rail Interactive Map. One major hurdle to overcome when communicating to voters about the importance of the California High Speed Rail project is lack of familiarity. Unless you are talking to someone who has visited a foreign country and actually ridden a high-speed train, or perhaps to a train geek, it is entirely likely that the phrase “high speed train”, at least in the context of California, could simply bring to mind an Amtrak train that runs a bit more on schedule. Many voters will not realize immediately that high-speed rail — a civilized and just plain cool type of ground transportation that will link California’s cities with a downtown-to-downtown level of connectivity that air travel will never enjoy — is really an entirely different travel mode for the state of California. We have nothing like it here now, so visualizations depicting what the system might look like could be instrumental in bridging the familiarity gap. The High Speed Rail Authority is on it, with its new interactive map of the proposed system. Choose a start point, an end point, and watch the train zip through the countryside, stopping in active, high-density downtown centers. Okay, okay: so the map does mark Pacheco as the default route, though at least with no Los Banos station — but it is still fun to play with. Give it a whirl.
[California High Speed Rail Authority]

But Nick, you’re missing the point! The point is not to see how long it takes to get to Sacramento; the only point you need to know is that it takes 2h 38 min from SF to LA. That is the only leg of the trip that matters. :)

I agree with you the routing is stupid, but you’re comparing apples to oranges with your example. Amtrak doesn’t currently offer direct service from SF to Sacramento, and you need to add 30 minutes for the shuttle bus from the Ferry Building to Emeryville.

A trip from San Jose to Sacramento drops from 3:05 to 1:24, but that is part of the second phase and you’ve pointed out there is already reasonable Amtrak service to Sacramento.

From SF to LA today you’re looking at a 9+ hour trip including at least one lengthy bus transfer or 12:40 hour trip (including that shuttle bus again) on the Coast Starlight.

I hope when the time comes to extend service to Sacramento, the Altamont Pass will be back on table to fix the route, but the critical part is still the initial SF-LA segment.

I’m pretty sure Nick fully realizes that Amtrak trains don’t go to SF now. The point is that SF->Sacto routed through Altamont would enjoy still shorter travel times. And the critical SF-LA segment is of course well served through Altamont.

Altamont was the wrong choice, and Pacheco the right choice, and Pacheco won. Get over it. High Speed Rail is for North/South Travel between Southern California and the Bay Area, and specifically, L.A. to SF, NOT COMMUTER TRAFFIC. And yes IT IS important that CHSR stop in San Jose. To not stop in San Jose would be sheer idiocy. I’m so glad that the Altamont proposal died, like it should have.The right and sensible choice won.

I have to agree with JL. The HSR is designed to served longer routes. There are already upgrades being planned as ridership increases, in regional services. The main goal for HSR has always been to connect No Cal with So Cal.